Laguerre geometry is described as either the geometry of oriented lines and circles in the Euclidean plane, equipped with a certain unusual symmetry group (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laguerre_transformations) or as the geometry of vertical parabolas and non-vertical lines (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laguerre_plane).
The group of symmetries of the Laguerre plane is the same as the group $PGL(2,\mathbb D)$ where $\mathbb D$ is the dual numbers. It makes me wonder: Did Laguerre start with the symmetry group $PGL(2,\mathbb D)$ and then work out the geometry, or did he formulate a geometry somehow and people later discovered that its symmetry group was $PGL(2,\mathbb D)$?
(Don't know what tags to use.)